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OK, got my lazy *** off the couch and upstairs to fetch my ATI book. Angina is relieved by nitrates, AMI pain is only relieved by IV morphine. Like gcat626 said, opioids decrease preload- ATI says the mechanism is by venous vasodilation, and decreasing pain and hence sympathetic stress that would increase preload. ATI doesn't give an order of administration, though.
What reference material are you using?
OK, got my lazy *** off the couch and upstairs to fetch my ATI book. Angina is relieved by nitrates, AMI pain is only relieved by IV morphine. Like gcat626 said, opioids decrease preload- ATI says the mechanism is by venous vasodilation, and decreasing pain and hence sympathetic stress that would increase preload. ATI doesn't give an order of administration, though.What reference material are you using?
This exact question came up in a Kaplan class taken by some friends of mine.
It stumped the teacher for a while because she kept wondering why they were treating the pain "first." She had fallen for the trap of this question: getting you to think that the morphine is for pain and not for decreasing preload.
One of my classmates remembered our med surg instructor lecturing us on this and corrected the Kaplan instructor.
I was taught MONA, but was taught that the order was wrong... in class MONA was easy to remember but the sequence was taught OANM... maybe we were taught wrong...Thanks for the responses!
We were taught Mona first year but second year they said it changed to OANM, I don't know if NCLEX was updated with that change. I didn't have any questions like that on my NCLEX.
Turd Ferguson
455 Posts
Still studying for NCLEX... I have a question about chest pain in the hospital.
If a patient complains of crushing chest pain while they're hospitalized, why would you give IV Morphine before you give SL Nitro? My resource says IV Morphine is the priority... why?